When automobile production resumed after World War II, Packard, like most other automakers, simply brought back the cars it was making before. In Packard’s case, this was the Packard Clipper that was introduced in 1941. The Clipper hadn’t been in production long enough before the war to allow a relatively low-volume luxury marque like Packard to come up with all-new models in the late 1940s like other automakers. In 1948, Packard restyled the 1941-1942 Packard Clipper, eliminating the separate fenders and the narrow tapered hood & grille, with the Packard Eight and Super Eight on a 120-inch wheelbase and the Custom Eight on a 127-inch wheelbase.
1949 saw little change, aside from the mid-year introduction of Packard’s Ultramatic automatic transmission, Packard’s first automatic transmission and the only one developed by an independent automaker without outside assistance. Packard production would hit a peak of 116,000 cars for 1949, making it one of Packard’s best years ever.
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